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From the time he got wind of the Fourteenth Amendment (probably December 1865 when he was in Washington), Alcorn linked Mississippi’s readmission to the Union to its ratification. Indeed, there was a bill in Congress that spring (1866) that would have assured the South’s reentering the Union in return for ratification. The bill died in Congress that summer (but the requirement did not). Alcorn believed that readmission and representation (the two were actually one) were prerequisites for peace, order, and prosperity, and he was willing to sacrifice principle to do business with the devil himself to obtain them. By the devil himself, I refer to the Radical Congress, not the Negro, but by virtue of the voting booth, the black man provided the potential for advancing the Radical cause. White Southerners considered that power illegitimate (which it was), but Alcorn warned in November of 1866 the Negro would get the vote anyway, and it would be better “to align him with us than against us” (I’m paraphrasing here).
Under the Reconstruction Acts (which were also
unconstitutional), Congress imposed martial law across the South. General E. O.
C. Ord assumed command of the Fourth Military District (Mississippi and
Arkansas with headquarters in Vicksburg) on 26 March 1867. In reporting the
general’s initial inspection of the state in company with Governor Humphreys,
the editor of the Jackson Clarion
made reference to the general’s wartime record as that of a soldier doing his
duty, and the man indicated no “spirit of revenge” in his present position.
General Ord was a native of Maryland and a West Point
graduate. He was familiar with Mississippi. He’d been Sherman’s right wing at
Corinth and his left at Jackson. He’d been present at the surrender of
Vicksburg. If you want my opinion, Ord should have been concerned with thoughts
of revenge, but not his own. Truth was though the people of Mississippi were
apprehensive about the introduction of martial law, as any people should be;
civil servants were concerned with their jobs, and Mississippi wanted no
problems with the unwarranted military presence.
Ord initially dispelled concerns over civil positions—as
long as everything was in keeping with the Reconstruction Acts—so give him a
little time, in the meanwhile everyone “continue to come to work” (again I’m
paraphrasing). What it boiled down to (initially) was that vacancies would be
filled by “loyal” citizens. In time “disloyal” citizens would be removed from
positions of public trust for “failure to do impartial justice to persons
accused of crime”. Such vacancies would eventually be filled with “loyal”
citizens. General Ord was the arbiter of what constituted a “disloyal” citizen—or
what was considered “impartial justice”—which when expanded, translated to
saying anything against the Reconstruction Acts.
To ensure change of personnel was in keeping with said Acts,
no incumbencies were to be filled until the electorate was registered—but Ord
did made appointments before elections were held. I’m guessing these were “temporary” to keep the wheels of civil
government turning, and numbered 71, which was
more than there were vacancies, so he expanded the number of “loyal” civil
servants. In his defense he removed only eight “disloyal” incumbents, but that
number included all the municipal officers in Vicksburg in the summer of 1867.
(The removal of all civil servants
did not occur until the one-month “reign” of General McDowell in the summer of
1868, which I will address in a later post).
Other than the dubious role of “establishing order” in
Mississippi (see my 24 January post below on how ludicrous that argument was), General
Ord’s objective was to register the electorate—that meant registering the
“loyal” citizens and ensuring “disloyal” citizens were denied the franchise.
The focus, of course, was ensuring the Freedman’s voice was heard at the ballot
box and the ex-Confederate’s was not. Apparently “loyalty” was defined in the
negative as “not having taken up arms against the United States government”
(unless you were a slave under duress, of course). It had nothing to do with
“professed” loyalty to the United States, but rather “never having been
disloyal.”
The oath was restrictive by design to ensure a significant
number of Southern white males could not take it without perjuring themselves.
Ord vacillated between allowing these men to commit perjury and having the
registrar report them for subsequent prosecution or having the registrar
determine whether they would or would not be registered on the spot (the
registrars were all “loyal” citizens, of course). General of the Army, Ulysses
S. Grant, resolved the issue by “suggesting” the registrar make the
determination. And just for the record—a presidential pardon did not remove the
encumbrance of having raised arms against the United States.
Reality struck home in September of 1867 when registration
was complete. Thirty-three of Mississippi’s sixty-one counties had Negro
majorities, meaning 60,167 Negro voters had been registered against 46,636
whites. My brief research indicates that ten to twenty percent of the white
male population was disfranchised due to their service to the Confederacy, but
there’s a big difference between ten and twenty percent—like doubled, duh, but
even if the high figure is taken and an additional 9328 voters added to the
rolls, the Negro was still in the majority. The fact had to be faced that Congress
would take Mississippi’s political affairs from her taxpayers and hand them to ex-slaves
and Northern strangers who’d invaded the state and knew nothing of its values
and history nor cared for its welfare—oh, but they would prove so adept at
spending other people’s hard-earned and pathetically sparse money.
While Ord busied himself with restoring order and
registering the electorate that summer of 1867, Alcorn was busy devising a plan
for survival in the face of this new reality. In Memphis he spoke to a group of
mostly Old Whigs and the unaffiliated and emphasized the need for Southern
political parties and their sharing the Negro vote. This he said would preclude
a white party and a separate black party controlled by white Northerners. He
envisioned his old Democratic nemesis vying for power with a new
party made up of Douglas Democrats and Whigs—or what once were Whigs—but
something other than Republicans.
They would divide the Negro vote between them (probably much like they once
vied for the votes of “lesser” whites in ante-bellum days). [You know, in a way
that’s what happened in the first two decades after Reconstruction ended and
we’d rid ourselves of the Yankee contagion: Democratic candidates courted the
Negro vote across the South. Then right before the turn of the century they
figured it was easier to exclude the black vote altogether.]
On the eighth of August (before the count of registrants was
completed), Alcorn published a pamphlet titled the Views of the Honorable J. L. Alcorn on the
Political Situation of Mississippi. In it, he addressed the Negro
majorities shown from the registrations in Tennessee, Alabama, and Louisiana
and emphasized the situation was going to be the same in Mississippi. The
electorate formed under the Reconstruction Acts would determine the governor,
the legislature, and the courts, and this situation would be sustained by
military force for who knew how long. The only way to fight it he said was by
“using our brains.” He denigrated the wide-spread belief that the Negro would
be influenced by his former master as “bullshit” (that’s my word, not Alcorn’s)
and used the example of Governor Brownlow’s election in Tennessee to refute
that delusion. The Negro majority, he warned, would fall under the influence of
the Republican Radicals.
In Views of the Honorable..., Alcorn pointed out
Congress’ partisanship. Still stumping his hybrid Douglas Democrat-Whig Party,
he argued that more moderate/non-Radical Republicans feared too close an
association with those men who professed advancement of the colored race, that
they feared Negro suffrage would adversely affect them with their constituents.
I am toying with the thought that maybe Alcorn himself is a bit delusional here. Granted he was a lot closer to
the problem than I am, but I’m not sure if northern Republicans were worried
about Negro suffrage damaging them or if he was thinking they should be,
because he had to be thinking the same thing in regards to his own stance on that subject. Yes, vocal demands in
their own districts might hurt them, but it’s the summer of 1867 and the
elections of 1866 are over—and the Northern electorate has told its bulldogs to
sic ’em (that meaning the South) by packing Congress with anti-Johnson Radicals.
Of course, Alcorn might have simply been trying to convince the people of
Mississippi his plan (his new party) still
had a chance, and he wanted the opportunity to try no matter how bleak its chances.
He goes on to say
that the Republicans could not afford two parties in the South and would
welcome white support in politics, since to his way of thinking, the Radicals
in the North were a loose cannon which would all too soon have to be bolted
down (or pushed overboard). Personally, I think he was betting too much, too
soon on moderate Republicans. He was, in fact, prescient—that is exactly what
happened to the Republican Party in the South—it split between the Radicals and
moderates (torn asunder by the weight of its own corruption is how I like to
think of it). In the meantime he stated for all Mississippians to hear—and the
majority didn’t like what they heard—that he was prepared to ask terms from the
Radicals.
Alcorn wasn’t the only Mississippian who was, at least, considering pragmatism
over principle. Representation in Congress was a siren’s call, and other
respected men such as A.G. Brown (Democratic governor and U.S. Senator who
served in the Confederate Senate); Ethelbert Barksdale (Democratic leader and
editor of the Jackson Clarion);
Judges J.W. Watson (Confederate senator from Mississippi) and J.A.P. Campbell
(Chief-Justice of Mississippi, member of the original Confederate Congress, and
signer of the Confederate Constitution. He fought for the Confederacy and was
severely wounded in battle, and after the war, he refused to take the oath of
allegiance to the United States); Alcorn’s old Whig lawyer friends William
Yerger and Wiley P. Harris; John J. McRae (ex-Democratic governor); and Fulton
Anderson (Whig and member of the Confederate Congress)—an odd mix of Whigs and
Democrats, secessionists and non-secessionists, those who openly served the
Confederacy and those who did not—all supported getting control of the Negro
vote before the Republicans did. So, this was not a bunch of scalawags looking
to exploit the conditions for personal gain and power. They were weighing
options to offset the evil permeating the North. Reading between the lines, and
given the records of the handful of men cited above, they were no doubt buying
time, believing that representation in Congress would give them the leverage to
later right their world. But how do you right the world as they knew it by
destroying federalism, which is what the Fourteenth Amendment ultimately did?
Still, given all the illegalities and unconstitutional gymnastics Congress was
forced to employ thanks to the intransigence of the Southern states in
resisting ratification of the Fourteenth Amendment, believers in state rights
today can hold out hope that a great statesman will reappear and wage a
successful battle to nullify the damn thing—the legal grounds are there.
To conclude this post, note that some of the men cited above
became members of the state “reconstruction club” which supported quiet
acquiescence to, not advocacy of, reconstruction. Like Alcorn, this “reconstruction
club” also referenced securing “terms” from the Radicals.
I’m sorry, but to “secure terms from” or “offer terms to”
anyone—don’t you need to possess something the other party wants and be in a position to withhold it? The South had
nothing to offer the Radicals they weren’t already taking for themselves, and
there was no legal way to stop them—the Northern electorate had ensured that.
Men such as those who made up the Radical Republicans during
those dark days provide some modicum of consolation when one considers there
might really be a hell, but I’d be content just to hear them excoriated as the traitors that they are.
Things will get lots worse before they get better. Thanks for
reading and more to come.
Charlsie
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In addition to this post on Alcorn and the two sighted in my
prologue above, see 17 February, 24 March, 16 April, 17 July, 24 July, 18
September, 9 October, 18 October, 5 November, 22 November, 15 December, 29
December 2014 and 13 January 2015 below,
best read in sequence from oldest to most recent..